Friday, May 18, 2012

The former chief counsel for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of
Philadelphia testified on Monday that church officials lied to him about
a secret list of 35 priests suspected of abusing children.

The list is at issue in the trial of Msgr. William Lynn, accused of
allowing priests suspected of abuse to continue in their ministries,
report the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Associated Press, the Allentown Morning Call and CNN. Lawyer Timothy Coyne was suspended from his job as chief counsel a few weeks after the list surfaced.

"Everyone I spoke to said they didn't know where it was, and they
didn't have a copy of it," Coyne testified. "Somebody lied to me—or a
lot of people lied to me."

A memo discovered in 2006 asserted that Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua
had ordered the shredding of the list shortly after it was drafted in
1994. According to Coyne, no one told him about the shredding order.READ MORE

Toshiba’s Home Nuclear Reactor

If we lived in a world where everyone was (a) smart and (b)
trustworthy, Toshiba’s micro-sized nuclear reactor, small enough to fit
in the basement or a large shed, would be a slam-dunk solution to the
energy/climate crisis.

Twenty foot long by six foot wide, the reactors produce 200kW of
energy and run themselves: the entire thing is manufactured with the
fuel within, and when it runs out, they can just send a truck to pick it
up.

"Unlike traditional nuclear reactors the new micro
reactor uses no control rods to initiate the reaction. The new
revolutionary technology uses reservoirs of liquid lithium-6, an isotope
that is effective at absorbing neutrons. The Lithium-6 reservoirs are
connected to a vertical tube that fits into the reactor core. The whole
whole process is self sustaining and can last for up to 40 years,
producing electricity for only 5 cents per kilowatt hour, about half the
cost of grid energy."

Waste, you say? Throw it in a mile-deep pit in New Mexico, or something.
Unfortunately, with the way nukes have been run,
it’s unlikely they’ll be replacing every neighborhood’s electricity
substation with one of these any time soon. It’s claimed there are
buyers in Japan and Europe. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, I recall, makes
something similar, but bigger.
Toshiba Builds 100x Smaller Micro Nuclear Reactor [Nextenergynews via Gizmodo]

That’s the question posed by a provocative media campaign that claims
that some prominent conservative leaders cannot serve two masters:
Jesus and the controversial author of "Atlas Shrugged," Ayn Rand.

The American Values Network, a group of political activists and pastors, sparked a debate when it recently released a videochallenging
some conservative and Republican leaders’ professed admiration for
Rand, an atheist who saw selfishness as a virtue and celebrated
unfettered capitalism.

Eric Sapp, AVN’s executive director, said the Republican Party
cannot portray itself as a defender of Christian values and then defend
the worldview of "the patron saint of selfishness" who scorned religion
and compassion.

Sapp singled out Republican leaders such
as Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Kentucky, and talk
radio host Rush Limbaughafter all of them expressed admiration for Rand.
Ryan, architect of the GOP’s propsed budget and Medicare plan, once said that Rand’s philosophy was “sorely needed right now,” and that she did a great job of explaining “the morality of capitalism.”

Former
News International chief Rebekah Brooks blasted British prosecutors
Tuesday for charging her with obstructing the investigation into phone
hacking at media mogul Rupert Murdoch's British newspapers, calling the
case "an expensive sideshow."

Brooks, whose husband, driver and
personal assistant also face charges, said she is "baffled" and angered
by the decision to charge "those closest to me."

"One day the
details of this case will emerge, and people will see today as nothing
more than an expensive sideshow -- a waste of public money as a result
of an unjust and weak decision," she told reporters outside her lawyer's
office. READ MORE

ABC News7 Chicago reports Trayvon Martin, the Sanford, Florida teen
who was shot and killed by a neighborhood watch volunteer, allegedly
made his own call to 911 just moments before his death.

Mo'Kelly Radio reported
on Mar. 24, also citing ABC New7 Chicago, that Trayvon made a 911 call
shortly before his death and the FBI was attempting to determine if that
recording captured Zimmerman’s voice in the background and, if so,
could the audio be enhanced to more clearly hear what was said.

[Update 4/11/2012:A call was placed to the
Sanford Police Department Wednesday, April 11, to follow up. The call
was redirected to the Sanford Joint Information Center. The gentleman
who answered the phone identified himself only as Lewis and said he is
not aware that Trayvon made his own call to 911 the night of the
shooting.] READ MORE

By Joe Palazzolo

Authorities in Florida have released hundred of pages of evidence, audio
recordings and photos in connection with the prosecution of George
Zimmerman in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin. Mr. Zimmerman, who
has been charged with second-degree murder, has pleaded not guilty and
is now living in an undisclosed location. READ MORE

It is the goal of the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit to ensure that the
media and public are accommodated to the best of the Court's abilities
during special interest/high profile proceedings. Below you will find
media advisories and public record documents pertaining to State v.
Zimmerman (2012-CF-001083-A). Please continue to check this website for
updates. Documents will be posted as they are made available for public
distribution. READ MORE

In letter from jail, accused killer pitched donation to his web site

MAY 17--Days before bonding out of a Florida jail, George Zimmerman
wrote that he believed “this will all work out for me in the future,”
adding, “I have given my burden to the Lord and he has blessed me with
tremendous patience!”

In response to a letter of support sent by an Ohio man who sought to
deposit money in his jail account, the accused murderer of Trayvon
Martin explained that he was only allowed to accept funds from
individuals on his approved list of visitors.

“The best way to send your support is through prayer!” wrote Zimmerman,
28, who noted that, “if you insist on sending funds, the best way is
through my website.”

Zimmerman wrote that, “My attorney seems cautiously optimistic about
me receiving bond tomorrow and I will put funds received through my
website towards my bond.” However, during Zimmerman’s April 20 bond
hearing, no mention of the web site’s substantial revenues was made by
the accused killer or his lawyer. Zimmerman, who was freed on $150,000
bond, had already raised about $200,000 by that time, his lawyer
subsequently acknowledged. READ MORE

Published: May 16, 2012

SANFORD, Fla. — The killing of Trayvon Martin
here two and a half months ago has been cast as the latest test of race
relations and equal justice in America. But it was also a test of a
small city police department that does not even have a homicide unit and
typically deals with three or four murder cases a year.

An examination of the Sanford Police Department’s handling of the case
shows a series of missteps — including sloppy work — and circumstances
beyond its control that impeded the investigation and may make it harder
to pursue a case that is already difficult enough.

The national furor has subsided for the moment. But as the second-degree murder case against the defendant, George Zimmerman,
moves from the glare of a public spectacle to the grinding procedures
of the court system and eventual trial, the department’s performance,
roundly criticized by Mr. Martin’s family as bungling and biased, will
be scrutinized once again, though in more meticulous detail.

Study on vast area of rubbish in north Pacific ocean finds it is beginning to impact on ecosystem.

arine
insects in the Pacific Ocean are changing their reproduction habitats
in response to environmental changes from the accumulating amount of
rubbish in the north Pacific subtropical gyre, also known as the great
Pacific garbage patch, according to researchers.

The patch has increased in size 100 times since the
1970s, including its swath of microplastic particles of less than 5mm
diameter. The marine insect Halobates sericeus, a species of water
skater, is now using the microplastic debris as a surface to lay its
eggs, said a study by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at
University of California San Diego, published on Wednesday in the Royal
Society journal Biology Letters.

"This paper shows a dramatic increase in plastic over a
relatively short time period and the effect it's having on a common
North Pacific Gyre invertebrate," said graduate student and lead author
Miriam Goldstein, in a statement released by Scripps. "We're seeing changes in this marine insect that can be directly attributed to the plastic."

Goldstein was part of a graduate student team, the
Scripps Environmental Accumulation of Plastic Expedition (Seaplex),
which travelled to the patch to study its environmental impact in 2009.
The study compared the group's findings to data from the early 1970s. READ MORE

Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback has not indicated whether he will sign the new legislation. (photo: Getty Images)

By Kevin Murphy, Reuters

13 May 12

ansas
lawmakers have passed legislation intended to prevent the state courts
or agencies from using Islamic or other non-U.S. laws in making
decisions, a measure critics have blasted as an embarrassment to the
state.

The legislation, which passed 33-3 in the state Senate
on Friday and 120-0 previously in the House, is widely known in Kansas
as the "Sharia bill," because the perceived goal of supporters is to
keep Islamic code from being recognized in Kansas.

The bill was sent to Republican Governor Sam Brownback, who has not indicated whether he will sign it.

In interviews on Saturday, a supporter of the bill
said it reassured foreigners in Kansas that state laws and the U.S.
Constitution will protect them. But an opponent said the bill's real
purpose is to hold Islam out for ridicule.

Kansas Representative Peggy Mast, a lead sponsor of
the bill for the past two years, said the goal was to make sure there
was no confusion that American laws prevailed on American soil.

Mast said research showed more than 50 cases around
the United States where courts or government agencies took laws from
Sharia or other legal systems into account in decision-making.

Commonly, they involved divorce, child custody,
property division or other cases where the woman was treated unfairly,
Mast said. READ MORE

ast Tuesday,
for reasons we need not go into here, I happened to be in the U.S. Post
Office in Geneva, New York. It is in an old, brick building downtown,
just up from the lakefront. It was constructed between 1905 and 1906 in
the Colonial Revival style, with four white columns out front arranged,
so the architects say, in a Doric entablature. There are huge, arching
windows arranged on either side. It is one of 13 post offices throughout
New York state that were constructed by the Office of the Supervising
Architect of the Treasury Department under the direction of James Knox
Taylor, a man who was not beyond some political chicanery. (Taylor got
into trouble when he picked his old partner to design the customs house
in New York City.) In 1989, the Geneva Post Office was placed on the
National Register of Historic Places.

Inside, it was cool and a little dark and it smelled
sweetly of old varnish. The woodwork was polished and the brass
finishings shone brightly. The marble countertops were cool and clean.
There is a mural inside called "The Vineyard" that was painted in 1942
by a magical realist named Peter Blume.
(Blume raised no little happy hell himself; in one of his paintings, he
portrayed Mussolini as a jack-in-the-box.) This is a place, I thought,
where you come to do business. This is a place, I thought, where you
would feel confident in doing so.

There is a reason that post offices were once built
this way. There is a reason why, during the New Deal period alone, the
country built 1100 post offices, and why it commissioned murals like
"The Vineyard" to be painted in them, and why there were marble
countertops and brass fittings and glistening woodwork. Authors Marlene
Park and Gerald Markovitz, who wrote about why post offices were built
the way they were, explained that "The New Deal sought to make the
national government's presence felt in even the smallest, most remote
communities.... The post office was 'the one concrete link between every
community of individuals and the Federal government' that functioned
'importantly in the human structure of the community.... [The post
office] brought to the locality a symbol of government efficiency,
permanence, service, and even culture."

As Stephen Colbert rightfully pointed out earlier this week, a 501(c) organizations — which he termed “Spooky PACs”
— operate like Super PACs, except that they are completely secret
organizations that do no reveal any of their donors. Like Super PACs,
501(c) groups can raise unlimited corporate and union donations, and can
spend that cash on independent expenditures, better known to voters as
attack ads, automated telephone calls, and political mail.

The biggest Spooky PAC since the Citizens United decision
has been the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The Chamber trades on its brand.
People think the U.S. Chamber, based in D.C. across the street from the
White House, is somehow related to their local chamber of commerce.
Rather, the U.S. Chamber is a partisan lobbying force that raises large
sums of money from multinational corporations to elect pro-big business
candidates.

The Republic Report was the first to reveal
all known contributors to the Chamber. But because the Chamber faces no
disclosure requirements, we only have a small piece of the puzzle.

United Republic’s Jasper McChesney put together this infographic that
shows how direct corporate cash, from firms like Prudential Financial
and Coca-Cola Inc, flows into the Chamber secretly, and is then used for
nasty attack ads: READ MORE

May 11, 2012
The conservative group that helped spread
Florida's Stand Your Ground gun law across the country holds a
closed-door issues conference in Charlotte on Friday. On its agenda is
legislation that would prevent a state's attorney general from pursuing
lawsuits except as authorized by the state legislature. Peter Overby is
at the conference and talks with Audie Cornish.TRANSCRIPT

JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon this week announced that the bank he heads lost $2 billion making risky trade under the guise of “hedging” (which is meant to reduce risk). Dimon has been one of the biggest critics of the Volcker Rule, which is meant to prevent banks from making massive bets with federally insured dollars.

Dimon appeared today on NBC’s Meet the Press, where he was asked by
host David Gregory if JP Morgan’s massive loss shows that the banking
system — just a few years after a financial crisis that nearly brought
the global economy to its knees — is still too risky. Dimon replied, “I
don’t think so”:

GREGORY: Have you given regulators new ammunition against the banks?

DIMON: Absolutely, this is a very unfortunate and inopportune time to have had this.

GREGORY: But if the best of the best can’t manage a risk like
this, does it not tell you that the banking system is still several
years after the financial collapse, too risky?

DIMON: I don’t think so. It’s a question of size. This is not a risk that is life threatening to JP Morgan.

Readers of this blog (and
friends) will know my mother as the person whose ideas about parenting
included reading booze-drenched modernist classics to me when I was
eleven. So, it will not come as a surprise to anyone that when I was a
few years older than that, she dropped me off at a Kurt Vonnegut reading
while she went to a lecture in another part of town. I was a big
Vonnegut fan at the time and thrilled to be seeing him.

I’d
spent an entire summer lying on the couch with the headphones on reading
his books. Though I had not survived the bombing of Dresden, I felt
that, like Billy Pilgrim, I’d become “unstuck in time.” When Jehovah’s
Witnesses came to our door to discuss damnation I would tell them that I
was a “Bokonist” the religion practiced by the characters in Cat’s
Cradle. And it goes without saying that Kilgore Trout’s “career” as a
washed up homeless science fiction writer was one to which I very
seriously aspired.

But the biggest influence Vonnegut exacted
over me was at this reading, where he told the students in the audience
they didn’t need to go to school and could just as well drop out. READ MORE

If you live in Columbus, Ohio, my sympathy.
Don’t get me wrong. Columbus is a wonderful town – the state capital,
birthplace of the late great humorist James Thurber, location of Ohio
State University and my brother Tim.
But if you’re a television viewer in Columbus you may be wishing
about now that you could jump into your set and join the castaways
on Survivor. According to the newspaper USA Today, “As the amount of
money spent on political persuasion has risen, there are now some places
where political ads are more like a steady rain. Here in Columbus, it
is pouring.”

“Columbus draws a lot of political advertising because
it’s the largest city in a big swing state that this year also has a
heated Senate contest and congressional races reconfigured by
redistricting. What’s different here is that when the campaigns end, the
advertising keeps on going. Political ads are on the air in Columbus
all the time.
“That’s great news for the local TV stations battered by a recession
that torpedoed their commercial advertisers. ‘We’re on the other end
saying, “Thank you.” We’re running around with a bushel basket trying to
catch it when it falls,’ said Tom Griesdorn, general manager of
WBNS-TV, the Columbus CBS affiliate.”

He’ll get no thanks from the channel surfers of Columbus. Since March
of last year, according to the public access files at WBNS, the station
has aired 2,588 political spots that pulled in $2.16 million. And it’s
only one of five commercial TV outlets in the area. READ MORE

Last week’s media coverage of the Obama administration’s
newly-proposed fracking rules focused so heavily on how drilling
companies would have to disclose the chemicals they use that it largely
overlooked the toughest provisions: Drillers would be required to test
the physical integrity of their wells, and more water would be protected
from drilling. Since many wells fail because the cement and casings
crack, the new tests could prevent dangerous leakages.

One major limitation: Although widely understood as “national”
guidelines, the draft rules would in fact only apply to a sliver of the
nation’s natural gas supply. That’s because they would apply to mineral
rights managed by the Bureau of Land Management, which means areas
beneath most BLM and tribal land, but scarcely any U.S. Forest Service,
private or state-owned lands – where most drilling occurs. Industry has
criticized the proposed rules as too restrictive. READ MORE

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) looks on as Republican leadership speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, May 8, 2012. (Photo: Luke Sharrett / The New York Times)

Sunday, 13 May 2012 09:27 By Jonathan Weisman and Jennifer Steinhauer, The New York Times News Service | Report

Washington - The primary victory of a Tea Party-blessed
candidate in Indiana illustrates how closely Republican hopes for a
majority in the Senate are tied to candidates who pledge to infuse the
chamber with the deep-seated conservatism that has been the hallmark of
the House since the Republicans gained control in 2010.

Richard E. Mourdock, who last week defeated
Senator Richard G. Lugar, a six-term incumbent, promises to bring an
uncompromising ideology to Capitol Hill if he prevails in November. And
he is not the only Senate candidate who contends that Senate Republicans
are badly in need of new blood.

In Arizona, Missouri, Nebraska and Texas,
Republican Senate candidates are vying for the mantle of Tea Party
outsider. A number of them say that they would seek to press an agenda
that is generally to the right of the minority leader, Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, and that they would demand a deeper policy role for the Senate’s growing circle of staunch conservatives.

Some say they have not decided whether they
would support Mr. McConnell, who could find himself contending with the
type of fractious rank and file that has vexed the House speaker, John
A. Boehner of Ohio. READ MORE

The
history of equality from antiquity onward reveals that the notion of
equality has been considered a constitutive feature of justice whether
in its formal, proportional or moral sense. Until the 18th century,
human beings were considered unequal by nature, an idea that collapsed
with the introduction of the notion of natural right first developed by
the Stoics and later in the New Testament Bible and both the Hebraic and
Islamic traditions. The principle of natural equality only became
recognized in the modern period beginning in the 17th century in the
tradition of natural law as defined by Hobbes and Locke and in social
contract theory first postulated by Rousseau. Kant's categorical
imperative formulates the equality postulate of universal human worth
and the idea is taken up formally in declarations and modern
constitutions, notably the French "Declaration of the Rights of Man and
of the Citizen" (1789) ("Déclaration des droits de l'Homme et du
Citoyen")(1), the American "Declaration of Independence" (1776)(2), The US Constitution (1787)(3) and the "Universal Declaration of Human Rights" (1948)(4).
As Stefan Gosepath (2007) explained, "This fundamental idea of equal
respect for all persons and of the equal worth or equal dignity of all
human beings ... is accepted as a minimal standard by all leading
schools of modern Western political and moral culture." It has not
always been so. READ MORE

At least 100,000 protesters angered by the country's grim economic prospects turned out for street demonstrations in 80 cities across Spain. This marked the one-year anniversary of a movement that inspired similar activist groups in other countries.

In the capital Madrid, thousands of protesters chanted and beat drums as they marched from different directions to converge on the central Puerta del Sol Square. The square was brimming with demonstrators during the evening, but visibly emptied as some of the protesters left after 10pm local time.

Authorities have vowed to block any attempts by protesters to camp out on the square, which is the popular movement's epicenter. Marches were also held in Barcelona, Bilbao, Malaga and Seville.

The four day-long demonstration marks the one-year anniversary of the "Indignants" protest movement, as Spain’s economic woes deepen by the day.

Joblessness has soared to almost 25 per cent – the highest level in the eurozone – with half of all Spaniards under the age of 25 are out of work. As the country already faces 30 billion euros in cuts so far this year, demonstrators say the cuts have left public services greatly underfunded.

The government is planning a fresh round of austerity measures as the country sinks further into recession, prompting fears that Spain may soon require a Greek-style bailout. These measures include hikes in property and income taxes, freezes on the minimum wage and cuts to health care and education spending, as well as further slashing of pensioners' benefits.

“We are here because we continue to be angry over the austerity policies which an economic elite is imposing on us," 21-year-old student Victor Valdes told AFP in Madrid. Another protester said it was important to let the government know “we are still here.” READ MORE

Bill Maher said what we all thought this week when he begged Joe Biden, whose "gaffe" on marriage equality forced the President's hand in favor of equal rights, to keep opening his mouth when he shouldn't.
I agree! I think Bidens hould come out for legalizing marijuana, slashing the defense budget, government-funding for low income women's abortions, and more.
Watch below.

Watch MSNBC host Tamron Hall get
totally exasperated with conservative commentator Tim Carney when he
tries to go "meta meta" on her by questioning (and thereby totally
dodging) her line of questioning. She's not having it, at all.

With
almost $500 billion in annual revenues, ExxonMobil is one of the
world's truly powerful corporations. With all its resources and riches,
the mammoth energy firm—the largest on the Fortune 500 list—Texas-based
ExxonMobil is not loyal to America. Former CEO Lee Raymond made clear
that his company’s only loyalty was to maximizing returns for
shareholders when he pronounced,
“I’m not a U.S. company and I don’t make decisions based on what’s
good for the U.S.” Or, Raymond might have added, based on what’s good
for U.S. workers and communities."

The
company has been resisting implementing a safety agreement at a
Louisianan refinery that it already has agreed to around the
country. “ExxonMobil has been trying to undercut rest of oil industry on
health and safety standards,” says Patrick Young of the United
Steelworkers (USW) special campaigns department. READ MORE

The Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party didn't succeed by
electing candidates--it succeeded showing the limitations of the
electoral system. Occupy should do the same.

May 13, 2012

As long as there has been a thing
called Occupy Wall Street, there have been people who've suggested it
should become the left's version of the Tea Party. Josh Harkinson's piece
is a notable contribution to the conversation because it comes after
eight months of in-depth reporting on the movement. Harkinson, like Jennifer Granholm,
suggests that Occupy should recruit and run candidates, so the left
has champions in Congress and can credibly threaten less ideologically
aligned Democrats. According to this logic, it doesn't matter if Occupy
does this itself or essentially outsources the job to our progressive
allies -- the point is to find ways to elect more good Democrats.

The
idea of a progressive Tea Party was totally my jam before Occupy
started. Like Harkinson, I didn't see how the left could create real
change in America without taking control of the Democratic Party. Now I
think it's important to recognize that the problems we face as a
country can't be solved by electing more Democrats, or even by electing
more good Democrats. A progressive Tea Party would be a welcome
addition, but it wouldn't be nearly enough to create the kind of change
we need.

If Occupy tried to
start a left Tea Party, we would be following in the footsteps of
several progressive movement efforts that came up short. Howard Dean's
presidential campaign turned into Democracy for America to reclaim the "Democratic wing of the Democratic Party," the Progressive Change Campaign Committee explicitly references the DCCC, and Rebuild the Dream
originally billed itself as the progressive Tea Party. I have worked
for each of these organizations and have lots of respect for their work.
But unfortunately, none of these projects, despite their many
successes, have managed to mount a serious national effort to take out
bad Democrats and replace them with good ones. They are constrained by
the lack of a grassroots base in many congressional districts and big
donors reluctance to fund challenges to Democrats. Even big,
collaborative efforts to take out bad Democrats have a relatively poor
record (See Sheyman, Ilya; Halter, Bill; or Lamont, Ned).

This Saturday, May 12, in New York
City, an alliance of more than 100 community activists, mothers, city
councilmembers and religious leaders marched from Foley Square to One
Police Plaza, demanding an end to police tactics they say have resulted
in two New Yorks -- or as the action was appropriately titled, “A Tale
of Two Cities.”

VOCAL-New York,
Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), the Drug Policy Alliance,
and other groups organized the event to demand an end to the racial
segregation they say Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray
Kelly actively enforce. The demonstration hinged tightly on the power
of a united New York. Nine white New Yorkers attempted civil
disobedience at the police headquarters, but were (ironically) not
arrested.

Fearing for their
children’s futures, many mothers in the crowd considered the action -- a
day before Mother’s Day -- a timely mechanism to defend their children
from injustice at the hands of the NYPD.

Lynn
Paltrow, executive director of National Advocates for Pregnant Women,
said criminal justice is a mother’s issue. “Reproductive justice doesn’t
just mean the right to decide to end a pregnancy or to continue to
term,“ Paltrow said. ”It means the right to go to term, to have
children, and not have to worry that when they are born, they will be
arrested because of the color of their skin.”

For
the NYPD's stats to add up, they'd have to have stopped every young,
black man living in the city once--and then some. Both marijuana arrests
and street stops are soaring under Bloomberg’s administration, but the
data shows that rise in aggressive policing is only apparent in certain
communities. Demonstrators stressed that pot arrests and stop-and-frisk
have come to epitomize a city-wide problem requiring urgent redress. READ MORE

Philip Anschutz is involved in a lawsuit trying to overturn a fracking ban.

May 13, 2012

He is a billionaire several times
over, a supporter of conservative causes, candidates, and organizations,
including campaigns of the anti-immigrant former Colorado Congressman
Tom Tancredo and the Intelligent Design-peddling Discovery Institute,
and he's been a backer of anti-gay rights initiatives. He owns The
Weekly Standard, a highly partisan conservative magazine, recently sold
the conservative Examiner newspapers, but rarely will speak to the
press.

After devoting years of
building a massive Disneyesque entertainment complex in Los Angeles
called L.A. Live - which tapped into tens of millions of government
dollars -- he now has his eyes on building a $1 billion stadium in L.A.
and securing a National Football League team for the city. He's also
been putting the finishing touches on a deal that would have his company
running the Coliseum complex in Oakland, California.

He
is a native Kansan, and although he's not related to the
multi-billionaire Kansas Koch Brothers, he certainly shares many of
their interests.

Documents show for the first time that local anti-wind
groups are co-ordinating and working with national fossil-fuel funded
advocacy groups to wreck the wind industry.

May 9, 2012

A network of ultra-conservative
groups is ramping up an offensive on multiple fronts to turn the
American public against wind farms and Barack Obama's energy agenda.

A
number of rightwing organisations, including Americans for Prosperity,
which is funded by the billionaire Koch brothers, are attacking Obama
for his support for solar and wind power.
The American Legislative Exchange Council (Alec), which also has
financial links to the Kochs, has drafted bills to overturn state laws
promoting wind energy.

Now a
confidential strategy memo seen by the Guardian advises using
"subversion" to build a national movement of wind farm protesters.

The
strategy proposal was prepared by a fellow of the American Tradition
Institute (ATI) – although the thinktank has formally disavowed the
project.

The proposal was discussed at a meeting of self-styled 'wind warriors' from across the country in Washington DC last February.

"These
documents show for the first time that local Nimby anti-wind groups are
co-ordinating and working with national fossil-fuel funded advocacy
groups to wreck the wind industry," said Gabe Elsner, a co-director of the Checks and Balances, the accountability group which unearthed the proposal and other documents. READ MORE

When civilizations start to die they go insane. Let the ice
sheets in the Arctic melt. Let the temperatures rise. Let the air, soil
and water be poisoned. Let the forests die.

April 30, 2012

Let the seas be emptied of life.
Let one useless war after another be waged. Let the masses be thrust
into extreme poverty and left without jobs while the elites, drunk on
hedonism, accumulate vast fortunes through exploitation, speculation,
fraud and theft. Reality, at the end, gets unplugged. We live in an age
when news consists of Snooki’s pregnancy, Hulk Hogan’s sex tape and Kim
Kardashian’s denial that she is the naked woman cooking eggs in a photo
circulating on the Internet. Politicians, including presidents, appear
on late night comedy shows to do gags and they campaign on issues such
as creating a moon colony. “At times when the page is turning,”
Louis-Ferdinand Celine wrote in “Castle to Castle,” “when History brings
all the nuts together, opens its Epic Dance Halls! hats and heads in
the whirlwind! Panties overboard!”

The
quest by a bankrupt elite in the final days of empire to accumulate
greater and greater wealth, as Karl Marx observed, is modern society’s
version of primitive fetishism. This quest, as there is less and less to
exploit, leads to mounting repression, increased human suffering, a
collapse of infrastructure and, finally, collective death. It is the
self-deluded, those on Wall Street or among the political elite, those
who entertain and inform us, those who lack the capacity to question the
lusts that will ensure our self-annihilation, who are held up as
exemplars of intelligence, success and progress. The World Health
Organization calculates that one in four people in the United States
suffers from chronic anxiety, a mood disorder or depression—which seems
to me to be a normal reaction to our march toward collective suicide.
Welcome to the asylum. READ MORE

Academic research is often dictated by corporations that
endow professorships, give money to universities, and put their
executives on education boards.

May 11, 2012

Here’s what happens when corporations begin to control education.

"When
I approached professors to discuss research projects addressing organic
agriculture in farmer's markets, the first one told me that 'no one
cares about people selling food in parking lots on the other side of the
train tracks,’” said a PhD student at a large land-grant university who
did not wish to be identified. “My academic adviser told me my best bet
was to write a grant for Monsanto or the Department of Homeland
Security to fund my research on why farmer's markets were stocked with
'black market vegetables' that 'are a bioterrorism threat waiting to
happen.' It was communicated to me on more than one occasion throughout
my education that I should just study something Monsanto would fund
rather than ideas to which I was deeply committed. I ended up studying
what I wanted, but received no financial support, and paid for my
education out of pocket."

Unfortunately,
she's not alone. Conducting research requires funding, and today's
research follows the golden rule: The one with the gold makes the rules. READ MORE

Trina Garnett accidentally set a fatal fire when she was 14.
That was in 1976. Could a Supreme Court ruling on juvenile life without
parole finally bring her home?

May 10, 2012

On August 29, 1976, around 1:40 am, a fire erupted at 1138 Spruce Street
in Chester, Pennsylvania. The building, in a row of two-family homes
just south of the Delaware Expressway, burned for two hours, killing two
boys: 13-year-old Brian Harvey and his 6-year-old brother, Derrick.

Neighbors spotted two local girls
at the scene: 16-year-old Frances Newsome and 14-year-old Trina Garnett.
But according to early reports in the Delaware County Daily Times,
“the immediate focus” was Trina, a “mysterious girl” with a “grudge”
against Sylvia Harvey, the boys’ mother. Investigators theorized that
she had broken a kitchen window and climbed through, lighting matches
throughout the first floor of the house and then escaping before it went
up in flames. On September 3, Trina was arrested and charged with
homicide, arson, conspiracy and burglary. She was held without bail;
police told reporters she would be tried as an adult.

The
youngest of twelve kids, Trina was known as a slow child. She had a
very low IQ and couldn’t read or write. Kids made fun of her for sucking
her fingers. Her mother died when Trina was 9, and her father was a
violent alcoholic capable of unthinkable cruelty. (Sworn affidavits
describe, in addition to horrific abuse against his wife and kids, how
he once beat the family dog to death with a hammer as Trina watched,
then made his children clean up its remains.) READ MORE